* Arnd Bergmann: > On Thu, Mar 14, 2019 at 7:41 PM Florian Weimer <fw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> * Arnd Bergmann: >> >> > diff --git a/arch/alpha/include/uapi/asm/socket.h >> > b/arch/alpha/include/uapi/asm/socket.h >> > index 0d0fddb7e738..976e89b116e5 100644 >> > --- a/arch/alpha/include/uapi/asm/socket.h >> > +++ b/arch/alpha/include/uapi/asm/socket.h >> > @@ -2,8 +2,8 @@ >> > #ifndef _UAPI_ASM_SOCKET_H >> > #define _UAPI_ASM_SOCKET_H >> > >> > +#include <linux/posix_types.h> >> > #include <asm/sockios.h> >> > -#include <asm/bitsperlong.h> >> >> This breaks POSIX conformance in glibc because the >> <linux/posix_types.h> header is not namespace clean. It contains the >> identifiers fds_bits and val: >> >> unsigned long fds_bits[__FD_SETSIZE / (8 * sizeof(long))]; >> >> int val[2]; > > What is problematic about the struct members here? I had thought that > only the struct names have to be in a namespace to be usable here, > but not the members. According POSIX, a user can do this: #define fds_bits 1024 before including the <sys/socket.h> header file. Similarly for val. Since glibc pulls in <asm/socket.h> indirectly, the result is a parse error, even though the programmer did nothing wrong (fds_bits is not an identifier used by POSIX, nor is it in the implementation namespace, ans <sys/socket.h> is a POSIX header). > We could use asm/posix_types.h instead of linux/posix_types.h, > would that address your concern? It should fix the fds_bits case, I think. But <asm-generic/posix_types.h> still uses val, so that part of the issue remains.